You hired someone in Colombia or Mexico or Brazil.
The interview went great. Their skills checked out. The rate made sense.
But three months in, something feels off.
They’re polite. Professional. But distant.
You get “yes” a lot, but no pushback. No real ideas. No spark.
Here’s what’s probably happening: you’re managing them like they’re in Kansas City.
They’re not.
And that cultural gap is costing you the best parts of what makes Latin American talent exceptional.
This isn’t about being “nicer” or learning to salsa dance.
It’s about understanding how connection, communication, and respect work differently across cultures and designing your team around that reality.
Let’s fix it.
Why Latin American Work Culture Feels Different
Latin America isn’t one country.
A Brazilian developer in São Paulo approaches work differently than a Mexican designer in Guadalajara or an Argentine accountant in Buenos Aires.
But there are patterns. Tendencies that show up again and again.
People first, tasks second.
In much of Latin America, relationships drive performance.
You can’t just assign a task, disappear for three days, and expect magic. You need rapport first. Trust first.
This isn’t inefficiency. It’s how trust gets built. And once you have it, that’s when the real work starts flowing.
Hierarchy matters more than you think.
Latin American work culture tends to be more hierarchical than what you’re used to.
Titles matter. Politeness matters. Formal language early on matters.
Your Mexican team member might use “usted” (the formal “you”) for weeks before switching to “tú.”
They probably won’t openly contradict you in a group meeting. Not because they agree. Because publicly challenging a manager can feel disrespectful or risky.
This doesn’t mean they have no opinions. It means you need to create safe spaces for those opinions to surface, usually in 1-on-1s.
Communication is high-context and indirect.
If you’re from the US, UK, or Australia, you probably communicate low-context. You say what you mean directly.
Many Latin Americans communicate high-context. They read tone, pauses, what’s not said. They soften disagreement. They avoid blunt “no,” especially with managers or clients.
When someone says “I’ll try,” they might actually mean “that deadline is impossible but I don’t want to disappoint you.”
You need to ask better questions. Create space for honesty. Combine verbal communication with clear written follow-ups.
Work ethic and team pride run deep.
Latin American professionals are sharp, proactive, and highly collaborative when they feel connected to the mission and respected by leadership.
Treat them like disposable offshore help? You’ll get disposable results.
Treat them like core team members? You’ll get team members who care.
How to Actually Build Connection
Most companies say they value culture.
Then they skip onboarding, ghost people for days, and expect “professionalism” to cover the relationship gap.
It doesn’t.
Run a live welcome session.
Get a founder or senior leader on video. Introduce the new hire to the team. Explain why the company exists, not just what it does.
If most of your team speaks English but your new hire is more comfortable in Spanish or Portuguese, add subtitles or a bilingual co-host.
This sets the tone: you’re a core team member, not cheap labor.
Explain how decisions actually get made.
Don’t assume people know how decisions happen, how feedback works, or how promotions are decided.
In more hierarchical cultures, ambiguity creates anxiety.
Spell it out. Then invite questions. Model that disagreement is safe by asking the new hire’s opinion on low-risk topics early.
Assign a buddy in their timezone.
Pair them with someone they can ask questions without feeling judged for 30 to 60 days.
This is especially important for Latin American hires who might hesitate to bother their manager directly.
Communication That Works Across Cultures
You can’t just message someone at 11pm their time and expect responsiveness.
Well, you can. But you’ll burn them out and lose them.
Set explicit core hours.
Latin American timezones overlap beautifully with the US. Mexico, Colombia, Peru are often just 1 to 2 hours off.
But overlap doesn’t mean always available.
Define 3 to 4 shared hours where everyone’s online for live collaboration. Protect the rest.
Follow up verbal conversations in writing.
High-context cultures rely on tone and subtlety.
After a video call, people might walk away with different interpretations.
Send a written summary: what we decided, who’s doing what, by when.
Then explicitly invite clarifying questions: “What could be unclear?” Not just “any questions?”
The second phrasing feels safer for people hesitant to speak up.
Give feedback without wrecking trust.
Blunt criticism lands differently across cultures.
In much of Latin America, public confrontation feels harsh. Direct negative feedback can feel like a personal attack.
For tough feedback, use 1-on-1s. Start with what they’re doing well. Then frame improvement as collaboration: “Here’s how we can make this stronger together.”
It’s not about coddling. It’s about delivering feedback in a way that actually gets absorbed instead of triggering defensiveness.
Create Rituals That Build Real Connection
Remote work is isolating.
Especially for Latin American workers who often feel excluded from team culture.
Schedule optional social time.
Call it “café virtual” or “mate hour” or whatever fits your vibe.
20 to 30 minutes, weekly or bi-weekly. No work talk. No status updates.
Rotate hosts. Rotate topics: music, food, sports, local news.
Let people share their culture, not just their project updates.
Celebrate local wins and life events.
Your Colombian team member just got promoted. Your Mexican designer’s daughter graduated. Your Brazilian developer’s team won a championship.
Acknowledge it.
Many Latin American cultures are deeply family-oriented. Recognizing milestones and offering flexibility for family responsibilities wins deep loyalty.
Celebrate country-specific holidays in company channels. Even a simple “Happy Independence Day, Colombia!” shows you’re paying attention.
Meet in person when possible.
Even once a year.
Fly people to Mexico City, Bogotá, São Paulo, or wherever makes sense for your team.
A few days together unlocks months of smoother async collaboration.
What This Actually Looks Like
Most companies hiring in Latin America never get past transactional relationships.
They hire for cost. They manage for output. They wonder why retention sucks.
The companies that win treat Latin American team members like what they are.
Skilled professionals who happen to live in a different place.
They invest in real onboarding. They design communication around cultural norms, not ignore them. They celebrate holidays that matter to their team. They meet in person occasionally.
And they get teams that care about the work, stay for years, and refer their talented friends.
That’s the advantage of Latin American talent.
But only if you actually connect with them.
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